Rabbinic Reflections - February 2019
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Having recently observed Tu Bishvat, and our connection the trees, fruits, and other produce of the land of Israel, we look ahead to the holidays of spring. Like Tu Bishvat, they occur at particular times of the year which are appropriate to their meaning. Purim and Pesakh have to happen when they do, but in seven of every 19 years, there is a twist in getting there.
On the Shabbat morning of February 2nd we announce the new Jewish month of Adar. In most years, this means that Purim is a few weeks away and then, four weeks later, Pesakh. But this year, and in every Jewish leap year, we add an entire second month of Adar to the calendar. It doesn’t have its own name; in such years we simply have first Adar and second Adar. This is the mechanism that pushes Pesakh back into the spring where it belongs, as well as the next High Holidays, which are pushed later into the fall. All of this necessary in order to compensate for the days “lost” each month in Judaism’s lunar calendar. Following the phases of the moon, each Jewish month has either 29 or 30 days, meaning the holidays are always slowly regressing farther back. If there were no calendrical correction, Pesakh would eventually be in the winter, and the High Holidays would be in the spring.
Purim and Pesakh have specific calendar dates on which they are observed. The book of Esther records that Purim is to be celebrated on the 14th of Adar, and the Torah marks the 15th of Nissan as the date of the Exodus from Egypt. We observe these holidays on the dates that the events they commemorate originally took place. The dates are not negotiable. But even without the extra Adar of the leap year, those dates would still occur; why do we need to also fix them in their season?
In his brief yet bottomless book "The Sabbath", Rabbi Abraham Joshua Heschel wrote that too often we are enslaved to the products of technical civilization. Engrossed with the things we have made, with the cleverness of our creations, we follow the pagan idea that value is rooted in things. But true meaning, he writes, resides not in things but in time. Shabbat is his primary example, when we consciously liberate ourselves from the world and experience time, free from buying, selling, making or destroying, the things of the world. Similarly, the Jewish holidays occur at particular points in time, and it is those particular times that gives them their meaning. It is not merely that the Exodus happened to occur in the spring, but rather that God willed it to happen then; not only how it did, but when it did. Events do not give meaning to time, Heschel writes; rather, time gives meaning to events. God acts not in the pagan realm of randomness but in the monotheistic realm of purposeful decision, of a caring and planned intervention into time.
Pesakh, in particular, must be a spring holiday. Its agricultural focus, its connection to the earth and the field, to the rebirth of nature, is the same time that the Israelites were reborn in history. That is not accidental. God took us out of slavery at a time that gave this explicit meaning to Pesakh, so that we would understand its meaning as God’s will. And so we must keep Pesakh, and all the other holidays, for similar reasons, in their seasonal positions. When they occur is a deep and meaningful feature of what they celebrate. As we look forward to Purim and Pesakh, we should remember their placement in the spring in terms of their time, and of how that time provides them much of their meaning.
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